John Ellis says:This is so naturally suited to vertical that one certainly doesn't think about the format. The pose may have been deliberately provocative to the photographer (or not!) but it is the volumes spoken by the male legs and feet in sight that lifts the photo.
John Ellis says:I'm rarely a fan of one's own shadow in a shot but the creative playfulness here enables this to hold its own as an individual creation of form. The position and shapes of shadows balances well against the wall and the pedestrian.
John Ellis says:This one stood out from others. It pits nature against mankind and then further comments on the order of things in our world by relegating motorised transport to the lowest order.
John Ellis says:It's difficult to describe this - it's the sort of photo that can only be appreciated by looking at it and letting one's eyes move from certainty to uncertainty afresh each time.
John Ellis says:All she needs is a beak! Such a good combination of the fancy-dressers and the bird portrait and overall colouring. This is a natural for the instruction.
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